The Battalion. (College Station, Tex.) 1893-current, March 11, 1952, Image 3

Below is the OCR text representation for this newspapers page. It is also available as plain text as well as XML.

    Tuesday, March 11, 1052
THE BATTALION
Page g
‘Madness’ Reigns At Architects ASABAB Ball
ipMp «
-
■
I*
W!!8te. -^SBfaMP . ___
Mm . IJ1
■W^.j# a • •• I
' '
. :?•' •
mmsmmmkmmm
m
mi Jfe I
l$£fi3SI
: ;
C'vffl
■
plllll
p^p
mfc '-mim
Mr. and Mrs. Glenn C. Lareau go formal to the architects annual
Ball—ASABAB. The couple attended the dance dressed as a mon
ster while his wife came as a headless ghoul. Mrs. LaReau carried
her head on a dagger. This costume won the second place honors.
(Battalion Photo by Cushion).
......
The architects decorated the hall with netting,
and abstractions designed to carryout the general
theme of madness.—(Staff Photo by Cashion).
Appearing as an apparation out of a bad dream
Ted Howard and Miss Pat Rushing enjoy the
madness of the architects annual beaux arts ball
which was held Saturday night in Sbisa Hall.
Guest List for Military Day
(Continued from Page 1)
tickets will be ready for distribu
tion to unit supply sergeants im
mediately. King said the tickets
are to be distributed through the
supply sergeants on regimental
staffs and from there to the com
pany supply sergeants. He pointed
out that company supply officers
will supervise sales of tickets in
their units.
In the freshman area a similar
set up will be provided sergeant
majors and company first ser
geants, King added.
It was decided by members of
the Military Ball Committee to
allow any student in uniform to at-
]Landscape Exhibits
Now On Display Here
A permanent traveling exhibit
of the programs in landscape archi
tecture at Cornell University, Uni
versity of Massachusetts, Univer
sity of Michigan and A&M is on
display in the landscape archi
tecture drafting room, 317 Agri
cultural Engineering building.
The exhibit arrived here from
Philadelphia where it was assembl
ed for the annual meeting of the
American Society of Landscape
Architects late in January.
tend the dance, whether or not he
is in the corps now. Reserve per
sonnel who are former students,
students, or members of the college
staff may attend the dance. Tick
ets wall be on sale in the Office
of Student Activities, Goodwin
Hall, for these people who do not
live in the military units.
Distinguished Guests
Distinguished guests who will at
tend the Military ,Day activities
include the following:
Congressman Olin E. Teague,
sixth district, Washington; Major
Gen. A. R. Bolling, assistant chief
of staff, G-2, Department of the
Army, Washington; Maj. Gen.
Hugh Milton, executive ROTC af
fairs, Department of the Army,
Washington; Maj. Gen. and' Mrs.
Arthur Thomas, commanding gen
eral, Fourteenth Air Force, Rob
ins Air Force Base, Ga.
Maj. Gen. and Mrs. Warren R.
Carter, commadning general, Fly
ing Training Air Force, Waco;
Maj. Gen. and Mrs. H. Miller Ains
worth, commanding general, 36th
Infantry Division; Maj. Gen. and
Mrs. Arthur R. Gaines, command
ing general, Brooke General Hospi
tal, Fort Sam Houston.
Brig. Gen. Robert Copsey, exe
cutive ROTC affairs, US Air
Force, Washington. Brigadier Har
old E. Taber, military attache from
Canada. Brig. Gen. Gunnar Moller,
military Attache from Sweden;
Briadier Probhat Chandra Banerji,
military attache from India.
Other Guests
Brig. Gen. and Mrs. Leonard J.
Greenley, commanding general,
training command, Fort McClellan,
Ala.; Brig. Gen. Alvin R. Luedecke,
USAF strategic planning, Wash
ington; Brig. Gen. and Mrs. Harry
Crutcher, Jr., USAF, ret.; Brig.
Gen. and Mrs. Oscar B. Abbott,
USA, ret.; Col. M. Gordon-Watson
and Mrs. Watson, British military
attache.
Col. and Mrs. Charles F. Cruise,
Brooke General Hospital, Fort Sam
Houston; Col. and Mrs. James C.
McGehee, commanding officer,
Bryan AFB; Col. and Mrs. Richard
N. Ellis, executive officer, Bryan
AFB; Col. and Mrs. H. M. Wittkop,
vice-commander, Fourteenth Air
Force; Col. and Mrs. George G.
Smith, military affairs committee,
Houston.
Col. and Mrs. E. E. McKesson,
PAST&T Texas University; Col.
and Mrs. Frederic A. Henney,
PMS&T, Texas University; Lt. Col.
and Mrs. Clyde C. Carter, direct
or AFROTC, Hqs. Fourteenth Air
Force.
Debate Squad
Places Fourth
The A&M Debate Squad won two
and lost four debates to place
fourth in the Southwest Confer
ence Debate Meet, held last Satur
day in Waco. Texas and Arkansas
were the two Aggie wins.
SMU won the meet with Baylor
taking second place. Making the
trip for A&M were James Farmer,
Dan Davis, Berthold Weller, and
Joe Riddle.
Next Friday and Saturday, mem
bers of the squad will journey to
Nacadoches to take part in the
Piney Woods Debate Tournament.
Debate subject for all intercol
legiate degates this year is “Re
solved: That the Federal Govern
ment Should Adopt a Permanent
Program of Wage and Price Con
trol.”
That feeling of madness a person gets when he thinks he has for
gotten something was the theme of the costume of Roland S.
Bantmann. His date Miss Wilhelmina Harvel tries to look in the
other direction to keep from noticing' Bantmann forgot his pants.
(Battalion Photo by Cashion)
Livestock Judging
Meeting Underway
The participating personnel in
the Livestock Judging and Grad
ing conference which got under
way at A&M today and lasts
through Tuesday, includes Ed
Bealke, Jack Bourland and H. P.
Jones, Swift and Co., Ft. Worth.
Roy Boswell, manager and Jim
Mitchell, executive vice president
and secretary, Texas Livestock
Marketing Association, Ft. Worth;
J. W. Burns, C. F. Murphy, Carl
Reppeto, Henry Stieben, J. L.
Stroud and John Vestal, Armour
and Co. Ft. Worth.
Glen Ellison, Market News Ser
vice, San Antonio; Eugene Horan,
USD A grading supervisor, San
Antonio; Beal Pumphrey, Union
Stockyai’ds, San Antonio; C. N.
Shepardson, dean, school of agri
culture, A&M; H. W. Twedell,
Houston Packing Co., Houston.
A&M Staff
The Animal Husbandry staff of
A&M F. I. Dahlberg, Fred Hale,
Dale Handlin, J. H. Jones, W. G.
Kammlade Jr., J. C. Miller, J. G.
Moffitt, E. M. Regenbrecht, J. K.
Riggs, G. L. Robei'tson, Roy
Simms, A. L. Smith and U. D.
Thompson.
Cattle, Hogs and sheep are being
inspected at the beef cattle center.
Tuesday the carcasses of the ani
mals will be inspected in the ani
mal industries building.
The program Monday includes
grading steers, grading fat lambs,
grading fat farrows, grading cat
tle, grading hogs, grading, sheep
at the beef cattle center and a
panel discussion at night in the
animal industries building, with
J. C. Miller, as chairman.
Tuesday. sessions will be held in
the animal industries building and
includes discussions of beef and
lamb carcasses. Lunch will be
served by the Saddle and Sirloin
Club. A discussion of hog carcasses
will be held in the afternoon.
A wonderful case of
“dual personality 99
ARROW GABANARO
1*0 "V v
j m
^ • j m
J. C. Miller Judges
At Livestock Show
Dr. J. C. Miller, Head of the
Animal Husbandry Department,
judged lambs and steers at the
Austin Livestock Show March 12.
Dr. W. G. Kammlade, Jr., Asst.
Professor in Charge of Sheep and
Wool in the department, has served
as judge of sheep at the show on
the 19th and 21st.
IT'S A LOAF SHIRT
IT'S A DATE SHIRT
GABANARO is
amazingly comfortable either way, thanks
to Arrow’s revolutionary ARAFOLD collar.
Fine, washable rayon gabardine. Wide
range of popular colors,
ARROW
»» —=
SHIRTS • TIES • SPORTS SHIRTS • UNDERWEAR • HANDKERCHIEFS
WhaUs Cooking
ASAS: Tuesday, 7:30 p. m., Ag.
Eng. lecture room. Program by
Juniors; refreshments.
EAST TEXAS CLUB: Tuesday,
7:30 p. m., Room 2-C MSC. Select
duchess for Cotton Pageant; plans
for Easter party.
ROBERTSON COUNTY CLUB:
Tuesday, 7:30 p. m., Room 306
Goodwin.
SAE: Tuesday, 7:15 p.m., Room
2-A MSC.
AGGIE RODEO ASSOCIA
TION: Tuesday, 7:30 p. m., A&I
Bldg. Elect team for Baylor rodeo.
Get into the swing of Spring
\fl
If.
with
ARROW
GABANARO
the all-American
sports shirt
with sensational
new
ARAFOLD collar
$6.50
Gabanaro fits into your
sports life . . . your social
life. The Arafold collar can
be worn open, sports-style
... or closed, and worn ^
with a tie. Miraculously
comfortable either way.
Washable rayon gabardine./
Smart colors. Your exact
collar size and sleeve
length.
W. S. D.
Clothiers
VDR ARROW UNIVERSITY STYLES
ISii
Gilbert Kissling
In a dead-pan description of
‘My Girl” Kissling was branded
as one of the top performers at
the MSC Talent show. He is a
sophomore business major at
TU.—(Photo by Cashion).
double edge shavers!
If shaving is making and
keeping your face tender,
maybe it’s the blade
you’re using. You owe it
to your face to try
P^^^HOLIOW
DOUBLE EDGE BLADES
Does your face sting and
burn when you apply shave
lotion—or even cold water?
Chances are you're using
a blade sharpened like a
penknife. You have to
"bear down” to shave clean.
PAL's patented Hollow
Ground process makes "bearing
down” unnecessary. You shave
with a light, light stroke.
Just the weight of the
razor does the job. After
a PAL shave your face is
cool, relaxed, as smooth as/
a teen-ager's. Try
PAL—you owe it to
your face.
y<wr8est$bde8c/y/
10 for 25c
21 for 49c • 44 for 98c
in Zipak dispenser with vault
for used blades
4 for 10c in regular packing
PAL Single
Edge and
new PAL Gold
Thin Double i‘«Sl
Edge at same
low prices.
GROUND
20 for 59c
10 for 39c ■ 6 for 25e
in Metal Injectors with
vaults for used blades
FIT YOUR INJECTOR RAZOR PERFECTLY
PAL GUARANTEE! —Buy a pack of PALS
in the type you prefer. Use one, two or
every blade in the pack. If you don't
agree that PALS shave you better, return
the dispenser for full refund.
PAL BLADE CO.. Inc.. 43 W. 57 St., N.Y.C
PAL-“7/ie Razor Blade Made for Your Facer